It’s true. You can’t eat responses… unless they’re tomatoes and other edible items being thrown at you (and I think we’d all agree that’s less than ideal).

But, more seriously: your ultimate success in business depends on your profits – and profits ultimately depend on your conversions.

Yet still it seems the majority of copywriters and marketers crow about their response rates. One copywriter I know is frequently bragging about his rates which then turn out to be statistically meaningless.

To be sure, since it’s a numbers game the more responses you get the more conversions you’ll get, pro-rata, but that’s missing the point – and missing it dangerously, to my mind.

Let me give you a concrete example: on while ago I was consulting with a client on the phone. He’s based in Edinburgh, and yet is running his Adwords campaign as far afield as London. And since this is a service where he must needs come to your house to do it, there is no way on Earth (or any other planet) someone in London is ever going to be his client.

So, no matter how fab, zippy and spiffy his click-through rate, which is his response rate, his conversions will be zero. And since he’s paying for every click, he’s throwing his money away.

The trouble is, good response rates are emotionally appealing and we’re loath to do anything to cut them, even if it means our conversion rate improves.

Another concrete example comes from some time back, where a full 17% of people who hit my client’s landing page filled in an on-line application… but he never, EVER closed a single one of them.

So a superb response rate… and a lousy conversion rate (the point being, he, too, was completely wasting his money on the Adwords campaign drawing in those applications).

From this we can infer something pretty amazing… but that’s a subject for another day.

So for now, think on what I’ve said: response rates are nowhere near as important as your conversion rates.

Perhaps the most important of all marketing fundamentals is the Pareto Principle, and you should love the eponymous little Italian who first observed it and thank him nightly as you drift off to sleep snuggled up next to your teddy-bear.

Why?
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Today, I’m going to share some insights with you on “positioning strategies” – loosely defined as being how others see you in relation to every other seller in your market.

Now, I say this is related to the numbers game simply because if you get your positioning right it’s easy for you to cream off the top 20% of buyers in your market and leave the bottom 80% for your clueless competitors.

In business, as in every other area of life, people will treat you exactly how you let them. This applies just as much to clients and customers as it does to spouses, lovers, friends, family and even your kids and pets.

I find it amusing how virtually everyone realises they have to set boundaries for their kids and pets, but assume everyone else can do exactly as they like.

And, of course, they can and WILL… But…

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Y‘know video marketing can be extremely powerful. But it can also crash and burn like paper aeroplane carrying a cargo of gunpowder in a lightning storm. Yup, I’ve seen video kill response flat dead.

And the thing is, you don’t know beforehand what it’s going to do.

So the temptation is to spend a whole pile of dough on it because you figure the more flashy and “professional” your video is, the better it’s gonna be, right?

Um. No. Every time I’ve seen this tested, relaxed and informal wins every time.

But, hey, that doesn’t mean it’s always going to be the same, does it?

Nope.

But it still makes sense to test cheap and cheerful first.

Anyway, here’s a short video for you — and it’s one of those quick and simple video marketing tips that could save you a packet.

It’s OK.

You can thank me later.

Invoice is in the post.

You might be surprised to learn this (though you shouldn’t be), but things don’t change much at all, and this includes marketing principles.

Over the last ten years we’ve seen the Internet come charging over the horizon and make itself comfortably at home in the business community; more recently, we’ve seen a financial meltdown which, in my opinion, is going to get a lot worse before it gets better.

But even so, things are now pretty much as they’ve always been. Marketing principles don’t change.

The reason is…

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